The clip features CNN host Brian Stelter allowing himself to be bullied by Coleman, who is a retired TV weatherman. It’s actually from November 2014. Maybe Bolt knew this. Maybe he didn’t.

In the partial clip, Coleman makes the same tired and debunked talking points he’s been making for more than a decade about global warming.

Important things not clear from the clip Bolt shared are either John Coleman’s actual link to the Weather Channel or his actual qualifications.

If Bolt had shown his readers the full clip (still available here) he would have found that after Coleman had waved goodbye, Stelter went straight to an interview with David Kenny, who at the time was the CEO of the Weather Channel.

Kenny pointed out that while Coleman was a founder of the channel 32 years previously, “he has not been with the Weather Channel for 31 years.”

When asked if it bugged him that Coleman’s name continued to be linked to the Weather Channel, Kenny said: “I would prefer people to use their credentials they have today, not the credentials of three decades ago.”

So about those credentials. In the interview, Stelter says he won’t argue with Coleman about the science, because Coleman’s a scientist and he’s not.

Yeh. About that.

Coleman’s degree is in journalism.

According to his biography at the Heartland Institute, Coleman “earned a B.A. degree in Journalism in 1957 from the University of Illinois, and after a decade of self-study and correspondence classwork obtained the American Meteorological Society’s full Professional Meteorologist membership.”

In other words Coleman was a TV weatherman, he has no climate science qualifications at all and has no articles in the peer reviewed scientific literature about climate change.

Coleman complains that science isn’t about “consensus”, hoping that listeners won’t think too much about what he’s saying.

What’s really meant by the word “consensus” is the general agreement on a set of findings that you get after decades and decades of study, from tens of thousands of research articles published in the world’s best scientific journals, from researchers across the world, using different methods, all pointing to the same thing. After that, you get a “consensus” position that emerges on all those facts (a bit like there being a consensus among medical professionals on the best ways to prevent lung cancer – don’t smoke – or stop kids getting diseases like polio or measles – get vaccinated).

Coleman even references the discredited Oregon petition of “31,000 scientists” – a petition that was signed by leading scientists like Gerry Halliwell (of the Spice Girls), Michael. J. Fox (star of Back to the Future) and two characters from the TV show M*A*S*H.

Great stuff, Andrew.

Almost as good as that “lecture” he promoted from a “world leading climate scientist” which turned out to be neither an actual lecture, the words of a “leading climate scientist”, or even a picture of the right guy.

I went back to your last post on Bolt…to find the ‘great’ ‘contrarian’ still hasn’t acknowledged that the picture he thought was of Dick Lindzen is actually of Richard Alley…
So, he’s clearly not paying much attention to his anti-AGW feedstock, just uncritically reproduces junk fed to him… note the “(thanks to reader Glen)”
Bolt’s readers set the agenda, who’s he to disagree?
They’d turn on him if he admitted one doubt.

It is understandable that some people, including some media commentators, have difficulty with the concept of climate change and that conservatism, which is driven by fear of change, features prominently among so-called “climate sceptics”. If human activity is truly affecting global temperatures and that activity is fundamental to our “modern” industry, lifestyle, food production, travel and transport systems, then the world is in deep trouble. Most importantly, the greatest creators of CO2 require massive change to reduce that process and massive change frightens the conservative mind – by its definition.
Similar difficulties exist in ending or reversing current behaviours such as over-fishing the oceans, pollution of the oceans and soils with plastics and other industrial wastes, devastation of forests (our greatest natural protection against atmospheric CO2), obliteration of animal and plant species, and the continuous generation of antibiotic-resistant pathogens through over-use or misuse of medications.
These and the many other ways in which we are fouling our own ecological nest should be enough to scare anyone. Those who wield power should make any attempt possible to reverse this suicidal degradation of our globe. But it’s much easier to simply disbelieve the evidence. Over-population is the main cause of all these problems and most humans have still not learned from the example set by lemmings. Like most thinking people, I fear the future faced by my grand-children and by their children.
It may be time to start composing an obituary for the anthropocene age.